Elizabeth Stanley, Kathy Voytko, Kate Wetherhead and Tony Award nominee Robin De Jesús have joined the cast of adult actors playing misfit kids in a Manhattan benefit concert of Naughty/Nice, a new musical comedy of darkly funny original letters to Santa Claus.

Robin de Jes

The 7 PM July 25 performance at Ars Nova will support ASTEP/Artists Striving to End Poverty. It's not intended for children.

De Jesús played cousin Sonny in Broadway's In the Heights and Jacob in La Cage aux Folles; Wetherhead appeared in Off-Broadway's Cam Jansen and Sarah, Plain and Tall, and co-created the webseries "Submissions Only"; Stanley was April in the most recent Broadway Company and starred in Cry-Baby and Million Dollar Quartet; Voytko was the most recent touring Eva Peron for director Harold Prince, and was in the Broadway cast of Next to Normal and The Frogs.

Additional Broadway performers will be announced. Jeff Talbott (the playwright-actor whose The Submission bows this fall at MCC Theater) directs.

The show is not recommended for children, and has been billed in the past as a sort of Avenue Q meets ...Spelling Bee meets "A Charlie Brown Christmas." Naughty/Nice, written by lyricist Kenneth Jones and composer Gerald Stockstill, was first seen in 2007 in a sold-out ASTEP benefit concert at The Players Theatre in Greenwich Village, and in later industry readings (at which time the show was called Dear Santa.)

Ars Nova is at 511 W. 54th Street. Tickets for the dress-casual, book-in-hand concert are $20 each. All artists are volunteering their talent, and 100 percent of the money raised supports ASTEP's programs to serve children in need.

To make a Naughty/Nice reservation, email tickets@asteponline.org; your name will be added to the reservation list (cash or check at the door). Seating for the 7 PM show is general admission, and seating is limited.

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ASTEP, the nonprofit organization that "uses the arts as a tool to foster creativity, teach life skills, and awaken young people's imaginations around the world," has a history of staging benefit shows that spotlight emerging talent.

According to its mission, "ASTEP builds a child's capacity for self expression through art programs which inspire youth to develop the voices and skills they need inside and outside the classroom. By connecting established and emerging artists with underserved youth, ASTEP uses the arts as a tool to foster creativity, teach life skills, and awaken young people's imaginations. Since 2003, ASTEP has partnered with community organizations to deliver after-school, holiday, and summer programs grounded in arts education curriculum. In addition to inspiring a passion for learning and leadership building, programs focus on social issues specific to each community such as HIV/AIDS, gang violence, drug abuse, gender equality, and teen pregnancy. ASTEP provides services to communities in New York, NY; Homestead, FL; and Bangalore, India."